Abstract

In the battle against Obesity as well as Eating Disorders, non-intrusive dietary monitoring has been investigated by many researchers. For this purpose, one of the most promising modalities is the acoustic signal captured by a common microphone placed inside the outer ear canal. Various chewing detection algorithms for this type of signals exist in the literature. In this work, we perform a systematic analysis of the fractal nature of chewing sounds, and find that the Fractal Dimension is substantially different between chewing and talking. This holds even for severely down-sampled versions of the recordings. We derive chewing detectors based on the the fractal dimension of the recorded signals that can clearly discriminate chewing from non-chewing sounds. We experimentally evaluate snacking detection based on the proposed chewing detector, and we compare our approach against well known counterparts. Experimental results on a large dataset of 10 subjects and total recordings duration of more than 8 hours demonstrate the high effectiveness of our method. Furthermore, there exists indication that discrimination between different properties (such as crispness) is possible.